Req is a batteries-included HTTP client for Elixir.
With just a couple lines of code:
Mix.install([
{:req, "~> 0.5.0"}
])
Req.get!("https://api.github.com/repos/wojtekmach/req").body["description"]
#=> "Req is a batteries-included HTTP client for Elixir."
we get automatic response body decompression & decoding, following redirects, retrying on errors,
and much more. Virtually all of the features are broken down into individual functions called
steps. You can easily re-use and re-arrange built-in steps (see Req.Steps
module) and
write new ones.
An easy to use high-level API: Req.request/1
, Req.new/1
, Req.get!/2
, Req.post!/2
, etc.
Extensibility via request, response, and error steps.
Request body compression (via compress_body
step)
Automatic response body decompression (via compressed
and decompress_body
steps). Supports gzip, brotli, and zstd.
Request body encoding. Supports urlencoded and multipart forms, and JSON. See encode_body
.
Automatic response body decoding (via decode_body
step.)
Encode params as query string (via put_params
step.)
Setting base URL (via put_base_url
step.)
Templated request paths (via put_path_params
step.)
Basic, bearer, and .netrc
authentication (via auth
step.)
Range requests (via put_range
) step.)
Use AWS V4 Signature (via put_aws_sigv4
) step.)
Request body streaming (by setting body: enumerable
.)
Response body streaming (by setting into: fun | collectable | :self
.)
Follows redirects (via redirect
step.)
Retries on errors (via retry
step.)
Raise on 4xx/5xx errors (via handle_http_errors
step.)
Verify response body against a checksum (via checksum
step.)
Basic HTTP caching (via cache
step.)
Easily create test stubs (see Req.Test
.)
Running against a plug (via run_plug
step.)
Pluggable adapters. By default, Req uses Finch (via run_finch
step.)
The easiest way to use Req is with Mix.install/2
(requires Elixir v1.12+):
Mix.install([
{:req, "~> 0.5.0"}
])
Req.get!("https://api.github.com/repos/wojtekmach/req").body["description"]
#=> "Req is a batteries-included HTTP client for Elixir."
If you want to use Req in a Mix project, you can add the above dependency to your mix.exs
.
Here's an example POST with JSON data:
iex> Req.post!("https://httpbin.org/post", json: %{x: 1, y: 2}).body["json"]
%{"x" => 1, "y" => 2}
You can stream request body:
iex> stream = Stream.duplicate("foo", 3)
iex> Req.post!("https://httpbin.org/post", body: stream).body["data"]
"foofoofoo"
and stream the response body:
iex> resp = Req.get!("http://httpbin.org/stream/2", into: IO.stream())
# output: {"url": "http://httpbin.org/stream/2", ...}
# output: {"url": "http://httpbin.org/stream/2", ...}
iex> resp.status
200
iex> resp.body
%IO.Stream{}
(See Req
module documentation for more examples of response body streaming.)
If you are planning to make several similar requests, you can build up a request struct with desired common options and re-use it:
req = Req.new(base_url: "https://api.github.com")
Req.get!(req, url: "/repos/sneako/finch").body["description"]
#=> "Elixir HTTP client, focused on performance"
Req.get!(req, url: "/repos/elixir-mint/mint").body["description"]
#=> "Functional HTTP client for Elixir with support for HTTP/1 and HTTP/2."
See Req.new/1
for more information on available options.
Virtually all of Req's features are broken down into individual pieces - steps. Req works by running the request struct through these steps. You can easily reuse or rearrange built-in steps or write new ones. Importantly, steps are just regular functions. Here is another example where we append a request step that inspects the URL just before requesting it:
req =
Req.new(base_url: "https://api.github.com")
|> Req.Request.append_request_steps(
debug_url: fn request ->
IO.inspect(URI.to_string(request.url))
request
end
)
Req.get!(req, url: "/repos/wojtekmach/req").body["description"]
# output: "https://api.github.com/repos/wojtekmach/req"
#=> "Req is a batteries-included HTTP client for Elixir."
Custom steps can be packaged into plugins so that they are even easier to use by others. See Related Packages.
Here is how they can be used:
Mix.install([
{:req, "~> 0.5.0"},
{:req_easyhtml, "~> 0.1.0"},
{:req_s3, "~> 0.2.3"},
{:req_hex, "~> 0.2.0"},
{:req_github_oauth, "~> 0.1.0"}
])
req =
(Req.new(http_errors: :raise)
|> ReqEasyHTML.attach()
|> ReqS3.attach()
|> ReqHex.attach()
|> ReqGitHubOAuth.attach())
Req.get!(req, url: "https://elixir-lang.org").body[".entry-summary h5"]
#=>
# #EasyHTML[<h5>
# Elixir is a dynamic, functional language for building scalable and maintainable applications.
# </h5>]
Req.get!(req, url: "s3://ossci-datasets/mnist/t10k-images-idx3-ubyte.gz").body
#=> <<0, 0, 8, 3, ...>>
Req.get!(req, url: "https://repo.hex.pm/tarballs/req-0.1.0.tar").body["metadata.config"]["links"]
#=> %{"GitHub" => "https://github.com/wojtekmach/req"}
Req.get!(req, url: "https://api.github.com/user").body["login"]
# output:
# paste this user code:
#
# 6C44-30A8
#
# at:
#
# https://github.com/login/device
#
# open browser window? [Yn]
# 15:22:28.350 [info] response: authorization_pending
# 15:22:33.519 [info] response: authorization_pending
# 15:22:38.678 [info] response: authorization_pending
#=> "wojtekmach"
Req.get!(req, url: "https://api.github.com/user").body["login"]
#=> "wojtekmach"
See Req.Request
module documentation for more information on low-level API, request struct, and developing plugins.
There are many packages that extend the Req library. To get yours listed here, send a PR.
Req is built on top of Finch and is inspired by cURL, Requests, Tesla, and many other HTTP clients - thank you!
Copyright (c) 2021 Wojtek Mach
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.